As Der Trumpenführer steps up his attacks on the press for reporting on his campaign's possible collusion with Russia - treason by another name - and limits access to certain press outlets, GOP Congressman Darrell Issa (who I generally view as despicable) called for a special prosecutor to oversee the investigation of Trump-Russia ties. Paul Ryan and Mitch McConnell has pushed to quash the appointment of a special prosecutor in what can only be deemed an effort to hide the truth, so Issa's move cannot be welcomed by either Der Trumpenführer's regime or those in the GOP trying to keep the truth from the American Public. Politico looks at this surprising move by Issa. Here are excerpts:

A Republican
congressman who aligned with President Donald
Trump during the 2016 campaign called Friday for a special
prosecutor to oversee the investigation into Trump associates' contacts with
Russia.

Rep. Darrell
Issa said on HBO's "Real Time" that Attorney General Jeff Sessions —
who Trump appointed as the nation's top law enforcement officer — should not
handle the problem.

"You cannot
have somebody, a friend of mine Jeff Sessions, who was on the campaign and who
is an appointee," the California Republican said in response to a question
from host Bill Maher. "You're going to need to use the special
prosecutor's statute and office to take — not just to recuse. You can't just
give it to your deputy. That's another political appointee."

Issa emphasized
that "there may or may not be fault" with Trump's associates but said
Russian President Vladimir Putin's brutality toward political enemies
highlighted the need for such a probe.

Issa supported
Trump during the 2016 election, a fact that Democrats exploited in an attempt
to topple Issa in his bid for a ninth term in the House. Issa prevailed by less
than a percentage point, and Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton
beat Trump in the district by a wide margin. That result immediately left Issa
as a top Democratic target for 2018.

Trump personally
vouched for Issa during his reelection bid, tweeting on Nov. 1
"@DarrellIssa is a very good man. Help him win his congressional seat in
California."

Far too few Americans know accurate history - of America itself, which has many ugly aspects, or of the larger world. History is down played in public education and many feel that history has no relevant lessons. Nothing could be further from the truth. History tells of mistakes made in the past and offers lessons on how to avoid repeating past errors that have all too often led to horrors, including millions of needless deaths and immense suffering. Sadly, supporters of Der Trumpenführer are either too ignorant or refuse to see frightening parallels between between events in the past and those now overtaking America that range from ceaseless attacks on the free press to cynical scapegoating of minorities to using "protecting the people" to justify authoritarian behavior. Add to this the endless brainwashing coming from Fox News, a/k/a Faux News, and Breitbart and the scene is set for some Americans to clamor for a strong man dictator. The question now is whether the majority of citizens will wake up and stop the dangerous trend. A piece in Salon looks at what must be done to save American democracy. Here are excerpts:

President Donald
Trump took his rancorous feud with the press to a frightening
new level last week when he posted an inflammatory tweet that echoed tyrants of the
past, calling the all-caps “FAKE NEWS” media “the enemy of the
American People.”

As many were
quick to point out, the phrase “enemy of the people” has a disturbing and
violent history, and has long been used by totalitarian dictators to
foster resentment and hatred of certain groups, and eventually to crush dissent
and opposition. The infamous French revolutionary and Reign of Terror apologist Robespierre
declared that the revolutionary government owed “nothing to the enemies of the
people but death,” while the term was widely used in Stalinist Russia
to single out dissidents, who were either imprisoned, executed
or sent to the Gulag (in the end, almost all of the original Bolsheviks became
“enemies of the people” during the great purge — which in reality meant enemies
of Joseph Stalin).

Needless
to say, the fact that President Trump thought it was appropriate to
use this incendiary language on the free press — long considered
the “bulwark of liberty” — is dangerous and alarming, and just the latest
manifestation of the Trump administration’s authoritarian tendencies. Just
one month into his term, the president has spent most of his time in
public scapegoating and demonizing the free press, blatantly lying
and espousing conspiracy theories that undermine faith in the electoral
system and displaying his contempt for the idea of separation of powers
and judicial review.

Trump has
surrounded himself with sycophantic enablers and right-wing extremists who
appear eager to advance his authoritarian agenda. One of these individuals is
the president’s 31-year-old senior adviser, Stephen Miller, a weaselly
young man who would be perfectly cast as a Star Wars villain. Last week, Miller
made the almost cartoonish assertion
that “our opponents, the media and the whole world will soon see as we begin to
take further actions, that the powers of the president to protect our
country are very substantial and will not be questioned.”

Like the phrase
“enemy of the people,” this is the kind of language used by party hacks in a
totalitarian state, not a free and democratic society.

Not
long ago this kind of rhetoric would have provoked outrage from both sides of
the aisle and widespread disapproval from the populace. But today, in our
hyper-partisan political landscape, many Americans have instead cheered Trump
and his administration’s increasingly dictatorial and undemocratic behavior.

Shortly after
the election, Yale historian Timothy Snyder, who recently said that we have “at
most a year to defend the Republic,” wrote a chilling article in Slate narrating Adolf
Hitler’s unexpected rise to power — without once saying his name — to draw
parallels with our current historical situation, and to highlight how the
German people quickly fell in line once Hitler had consolidated power and
established his totalitarian regime.

One of the many
brilliant Jewish intellectuals to flee from Germany after Hitler’s
rise, philosopher and psychoanalyst Erich Fromm attempted to explain the
shocking spread of totalitarianism in his lifetime with his influential and
urgent 1941 book, “Escape from Freedom.” This classic
investigation into the psychology of authoritarianism can help elucidate some
of what is happening today.

Fromm’s powerful
thesis:

If the economic,
social and political conditions on which the whole process of human
individuation depends, do not offer a basis for the realization of
individuality … while at the same time people have lost those ties which gave
them security, this lag makes freedom an unbearable burden. It becomes
identical with doubt, with a kind of life which lacks meaning and direction.
Powerful tendencies arise to escape from this kind of freedom into submission
or some kind of relationship to man and the world which promises relief from
uncertainty, even if it deprives the individual of his freedom.

It
is not hard to see this psychology at work in modern America, where economic
inequality has grown rapidly over the past several decades, where livelihoods
have been outsourced or automated and where communities have collapsed due
to the forces of globalization and the technological revolution, leaving
millions of people desperate and isolated. When these economic factors are
combined with other factors, including the perceived dangers
facing America (i.e., Islamic terrorism) — which are greatly inflated
by the mass media and politicians — and cultural/social shifts over
the past few decades, the victory of an authoritarian demagogue like Trump
becomes less surprising . . .

The danger of
the increasingly authoritarian Trump administration is heightened by the
growing number of Americans who are now prepared to support a
strongman if it means restoring, as it were, “primary ties” that once
provided “security and a feeling of belonging and of being rooted somewhere.”

Seventy-five
years ago Fromm argued that to counteract this dangerous drive
toward authoritarianism, it was necessary to “expand the principle of
government of the people, by the people, for the people, from the formal
political to the economic sphere.” Democracy, he continued, “will triumph over
the forces of nihilism only if it can imbue people with a faith … in life and
in truth, and in freedom as the active and spontaneous realization of the
individual self.”

Fromm advocated
democratic socialism and believed that only a truly democratic society —
politically and economically — could stop the dark clouds of despotism.
Today, as President Trump rehashes the language of past tyrants, one can only
hope that the desire for freedom will triumph over the urge to submit.

As I have said many times over the last decade and a half and longer, no one lies as consistently or viscous as the "godly Christians" and their "family values" organizations. The truth, scientific and medial knowledge mean nothing to these people who are most motivated by hatred towards others and who seemingly only feel happy about themselves when attacking and denigrating others be it through spokesmen such as Tony Perkins of Family Research Council who has documented ties to racist and white supremacist groups to the briefs that these purported non-profit, "educational" organizations file in federal law suits where LGBT rights issues are at play. Indeed, I still believe that some of the insane and vicious briefs filed by these groups in the Lawrence v. Texas case may have actually helped the LGBT cause because their were so vile, dishonest and unhinged. Now, in G.G. v. Gloucester County, as Slate reports, we may be seeing a similar phenomenon where these groups have revealed the deep animus that motivates them. The myth is that conservative Christians are kind and decent when in reality, they are not whatsoever. One can only hope the Supreme Court moves forward notwithstanding Der Trumpenfüher' effort to undermine the appeal from the 4th Circuit which had ruled in Grimm's favor. Here are article excerpts:

In
March, the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments inG.G. v. Gloucester County School
Board, a case about transgender bathroom access. Gavin Grimm, the
plaintiff—who has legally and medically transitioned from female to male—argues
that under Title IX, his high school must let him use the men’s bathroom. The
case has drawn a great deal of interest from both liberal and conservative
advocacy groups, many of which have filed amicus briefs in support of either
Grimm or his school. Three of these briefs caught my eye this week—one filed by Liberty Counsel, andtwofiled bythe
National Organization for Marriage together with the Center for Constitutional
Jurisprudence. These briefs, which argue against Grimm’s right to use the men’s
bathroom, identifies him this way in their front-page captions (emphasis mine):

G.
G., BYHERNEXT FRIEND AND MOTHER, DEIRDRE GRIMM

But
the Supreme Court, as well as all lower courts, identify him this way:

G.
G., BYHISNEXT FRIEND AND MOTHER, DEIRDRE GRIMM

That
slightly odd formulation reflects the formal way that federal courts style a
juvenile litigant’s name. (Grimm is 17.) It also obviously necessitates a
gendered pronoun use. Did these anti-LGBTQ groups misgender Grimm by mistake? I
posed the question to Liberty Counsel on Wednesday, and the organization
confirmed that it used a female pronoun because “Gavin Grimm is abiological girlwho now says she subjectively
‘identifies’ as a ‘boy.’ ”

These
groups may passionately believe that Grimm is a girl—but unfortunately for
them, they aren’t entitled to change his gender in the caption of their amicus
briefs. The court has very specific rules governing these briefs, andRule 34of the Rules of the Supreme Court
requires that each brief “shall bear on its cover ... the caption of the case
as appropriate in this Court.”

On
Thursday, I asked the Supreme Court’s press office whether the clerk of the
court considered the altered pronoun in the briefs’ captions to be
“appropriate.” And on Friday, a spokeswoman for the court informed me that the
clerk, Scott S. Harris, had sent out letters reprimanding the groups that
misgendered Grimm and demanding that they comply with the rules moving forward.
You can read the lettershereandhere

[This should] effectively
disqualify these amicus briefs from serious consideration. By misgendering
Grimm, these briefs clearly reflect the kind of animus that moved the school
board to bar Grimm from the correct bathroom in the first place. The briefs
reject the very validity of Grimm’s identity in a manner that is both offensive
and petty. Indeed, these organizations are so eager to deny Grimm this basic
dignity that they intentionally flouted the rules of the Supreme Court of the
United States. It is difficult to imagine a justice citing anything these
groups’ briefs say—even those who vote against Grimm. Liberty Counsel, NOM, and
the CCJ have given the game away, revealing that while they claim to care aboutbathroom predators,
they are really attempting to repudiate trans people’s identity.

And
to think—they might’ve convinced a few justices to cite theirbigoted illogicif they had only put aside their
animus for a moment and followed the rules of the court.

Again, in my experience, especially in the political realm, conservative Christians have been afforded undeserved deference from the media and others who have fabricated the myth that these people are kind and decent. They are not. They willingly embrace ignorance, bigotry and hatred of others.

Millennials seem to have recognized this truth, hence the massive exodus of Millennials from organized religion, especially Christianity.

Note: The husband and are personal friends wit Gavin Grimm and his amazing mother Dierdre Grimm. Gavin is being honored on April 1, 2017. along with me at Equality Virginia's Commonwealth Dinner in Richmond, Virginia, where Governor McAuliffe is the keynote speaker.

Friday, February 24, 2017

America has the most expensive and least efficient healthcare system of any advanced nation. On average Americans - at least those who can pay - pay two to three times more for heathcare notwithstanding Republican lies that the free market will lower costs. History has shown, the opposite has been the case. Now, even with Obamacare helping millions, the results are showing: life expectancy is increasing everywhere except in America. The policies so extolled by the GOP simply aren't working. The irony, of course, is that in many cases those most harmed by the GOP agenda voted Republican thanks to calls to racism and religious extremism. A piece in the Washington Post looks at this sad picture. Here are highlights:

Here's a rare
bit of good news: People are living longer than ever.

According to anew Lancet study, life
expectancy will jump across much of the industrialized world in the next two
decades. By 2030, women in South Korea can, ahem, expect to live to 90, up
from 84 in 2010. Women in France, Japan and Spain on average will hit at least
88 or 89 years, up from around 85. Men in South Korea, Australia and
Switzerland will also see big gains, living to about 84 by 2030. Fellows
from Canada, Spain, New Zealand and the Netherlands will also make gains.

But one country is stuck treading water: the United States.
According to experts who studied 35 countries, Americans will see only a
small boost. In 2010, average life expectancy for men here was 76. By
2030, they can expect to live just three more years. For women, life expectancy
will jump just two years, from 81 in 2010 to 83 in 2030.

Researchers said
our low performance is notable because “life expectancy at birth is already
lower than most other high-income countries, and is projected to fall further
behind such that its 2030 life expectancy at birth might be similar to the
Czech Republic for men, and Croatia and Mexico for women.” It's worth noting,
too, that the researchers only looked at data until 2013 — so they missed theunprecedented declinein life expectancy that hit two years
later.

Experts attribute the lag to economic inequality,
particularly when it comes to health care. The United States is one of the
only industrialized nations without universal health care. “This means that
some groups are getting left behind, and it’s pulling the average down,” James
Bennett, a researcher in the department of epidemiology and biostatistics at
Imperial College London, told Vox. Americans also suffer higher rates of death
from alcohol, drug use and mental disorders. We also have high rates of
obesity, homicide and infant mortality, which drags down our average.

Other
countries with high projected life expectancy include Australia, Canada and New
Zealand.Researchers credit their
high-quality health care, along with low smoking and traffic accidents.
France and Switzerland did well because they had some of the lowest rates of
obesity.

Listening to lying Republicans like Paul Ryan one is told that with Obamacare repeal, Americans will again have the freedom to purchase healthcare insurance that fits their needs. Missing, of course, is any acknowledgement that for millions, the costs of such coverage is prohibitive and millions would be forced to give up coverage. Amnesia reigns in terms of the fact that the free market and supposed competition was NOT keeping costs down before the advent of Obamacare and that insurance companies gladly price gouged and raped consumers with out of sight and ever increasing premiums. Paul Ryan's solution: tax credits that would allegedly allow Americans to buy insurance. The problem is that such credits would be nowhere near adequate. Case in point, the husband and I pay over $1,200.00 each and every month out of pocket for coverage (this equates to almost $15,000 per year). Yes, we are older, so premiums are higher, but then we aren't even purchasing family coverage. The point is, a tax credit would have to be massive to cover this cost and many people are age bracket do not have our combined income and the ability to pay the difference. Ryan's plan is hogwash as discussed in a column in the New York Times:

Across the country, Republicans have been facing crowds demanding to know how they
will protect the 20 million Americans who gained health insurance thanks to the Affordable
Care Act, and will lose it if the act is repealed. And after all that
inveighing against the evils of Obamacare, it turns out that they’ve got
nothing.

Instead, they’re talking about
freedom — which these days is the real refuge of scoundrels.

Actually, many prominent
Republicans haven’t even gotten to the point of trying to respond to criticism;
they’re just whining about how mean their constituents are being, and invoking
conspiracy theories. Talk about snowflakes who can dish it out but can’t take
it!

But perhaps the saddest spectacle is that of Paul
Ryan, the speaker of the House, whom the media have for years portrayed
as a serious, honest conservative, a deep thinker about how to reform America’s
safety net. That reputation was never justified; still, even those of us who
long ago recognized him as a flimflammer have been struck by his utter
failure to rise to this occasion.

After years to prepare, Mr.
Ryan finally unveiled what was supposedly the outline of a health care plan. It was
basically a sick joke: flat tax credits, unrelated to income, that could be
applied to the purchase of insurance.

These
credits would be obviously inadequate for the lower- and even middle-income
families that gained coverage under Obamacare, so it would cause a huge surge
in the number of uninsured. Meanwhile, the affluent would receive a nice
windfall. Funny how that seems to happen in every plan Mr. Ryan proposes.

That
was last week. This week, perhaps realizing how flat his effort fell, he began
tweeting about freedom, which he defined as “the ability to buy what you want
to fit what you need.” Give me consumer sovereignty or give me death! And
Obamacare, he declared, is bad because it deprives Americans of that freedom by
doing things like establishing minimum standards for insurance policies.

I very much doubt that this is going to fly, now that ordinary
Americans are starting to realize just how devastating loss of coverage would
be. But for the record, let me remind everyone what we’ve been saying for years: Any plan that makes
essential care available to everyone has to involve some restriction of choice.

Suppose you want to make
insurance available to people with pre-existing conditions. You can’t just
forbid insurance companies to discriminate based on medical history; if you do
that, healthy people won’t sign up until they get sick. So you have to mandate
the purchase of insurance; and you have to provide subsidies to lower-income
families so that they can afford the policies. The end result of this logic is
… Obamacare.

So yes, Obamacare somewhat restricts
choice — not because meddling bureaucrats want to run your life, but because
some restrictions are necessary as part of a package that in many ways sets
Americans free.

For health reform has been a hugely
liberating experience for millions. It means that workers don’t have to fear
that quitting a job with a large company will mean loss of health coverage, and
that entrepreneurs don’t have to fear striking out on their own. It means that
those 20 million people who gained coverage don’t have to fear financial ruin
if they get sick — or unnecessary death if they can’t afford treatment. For
there is no real question that Obamacare is saving tens of thousands of lives
every year.

So why do Republicans hate Obamacare
so much? . . . . No,
mainly they hate Obamacare for two reasons: It demonstrates that the government
can make people’s lives better, and it’s paid for in large part with taxes on
the wealthy. Their overriding goal is to make those taxes go away. And if
getting those taxes cut means that quite a few people end up dying, remember: freedom!

Ryan's hypocrisy and dishonesty is mind numbing. Making it all worse are his claims of being a devout Catholic - even though every single one of his policies goes directly against the Church's social gospel. Ryan ought to be excommunicated.

I make no bones about the fact that I despise Donald Trump and in my gut suspect that he and his campaign were in league with Russian intelligence in order to throw the election to Trump. Trump supporters, of course, don't want to hear anything about possible treason by Trump, et al, They'd rather close their ears and eyes and become complicit in treason rather than admit they were duped by Trump and/or lured by his white supremacist oriented campaign. What is telling is the White House's efforts to shut down investigations into or disparage reports of Trump/Russia contacts and by extension, collusion to undermine the electoral proceeds. If everything was above board and not illegal, why the efforts to suppress the investigations? In short, it becomes critical that the truth be ferreted out and that any collusion with Russia be exposed and, if applicable, treason charges and trials, and appropriate sentencing go forward. Here are highlights from CNN on White House efforts to pressure the FBI to cover up Trump/Russia ties:

The FBI rejected a recent White House request to publicly
knock down media reports about communications between Donald Trump's associates
and Russians known to US intelligence during the 2016 presidential campaign,
multiple US officials briefed on the matter tell CNN.

White
House officials had sought the help of the bureau and other agencies
investigating the Russia matter to say that the reports were wrong and that
there had been no contacts, the officials said. The reports of the contacts
were first published by The New York Times and CNN on February 14.

The
direct communications between the White House and the FBI were unusual because
of decade-old restrictions on such contacts. Such a request from the White
House is a violation of procedures that limit communications with the FBI on
pending investigations.

The discussions between the White House and the bureau
began with FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe and White House Chief of Staff
Reince Priebus on the sidelines of a separate White House meeting the day after
the stories were published, according to a U.S. law enforcement official.

The
same White House official said that Priebus later reached out again to McCabe
and to FBI Director James Comey asking for the FBI to at least talk to
reporters on background to dispute the stories. A law enforcement official says
McCabe didn't discuss aspects of the case but wouldn't say exactly what McCabe
told Priebus.

Comey
rejected the request for the FBI to comment on the stories, according to
sources, because the alleged communications between Trump associates and
Russians known to US intelligence are the subject of an ongoing investigation.

The
White House did issue its own denial, with Priebus calling The New York Times
story "complete garbage."

CNN
has previously reported that there was constant communication between
high-level advisers to then-candidate Trump, Russian officials and other Russians
known to US intelligence during the summer of 2016.

Several
members of the House and Senate Intelligence Committees tell CNN that the
congressional investigations are continuing into those alleged Russian contacts
with the Trump campaign, despite Priebus' assertion that there is nothing to
those reports.

It
is uncertain what the committees will eventually find and whether any of the
information will ever be declassified and publicly released. But the push to
investigate further shows that Capitol Hill is digging deeper into areas that
may not be comfortable for the White House.

The
Trump administration's efforts to press Comey run contrary to Justice
Department procedure memos issued in 2007 and 2009 that limit direct
communications on pending investigations between the White House and the FBI.

"Initial
communications between the [Justice] Department and the White House concerning
pending or contemplated criminal investigations or cases will involve only the
Attorney General or the Deputy Attorney General, from the side of the
Department, and the Counsel to the President, the Principal Deputy Counsel to
the President, the President, or the Vice President from the side of the White
House," reads the 2009 memo.

The
memos say the communication should only happen when it is important for the
President's duties and where appropriate from a law enforcement perspective.The
effort to refute the CNN and New York Times stories came as increasing numbers
of congressional members were voicing concern about Russia's efforts to
influence individuals with ties to Trump.

On
February 17, the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence held a briefing with
Comey. It's unclear what was said, but senators suggested there was new
information discussed about Russia.

"Every
briefing we go through we gain new information," said Sen. James Lankford
of Oklahoma, a member of the committee. Lankford declined to be more specific
about the briefing.

Rep.
Eric Swalwell of California, a Democratic member of the House Intelligence
Committee, said the goal of his panel's inquiry is to follow "leads
wherever they go even if they may be uncomfortable to Republicans."

"The
American public will want to know if the President had personal or financial
ties to the Russian government," Swalwell said.

As I have noted on this blog and in my VEER Magazine column, rigid enforcement of marijuana laws against recreational users costs Virginia (and other states) millions and millions of dollars each year. Worse yet, a marijuana conviction leaves young offenders with permanent criminal records that make securing good paying jobs in the future difficult, if not impossible. And as a crowning glory, such laws are disproportionately enforced against minorities who not only are arrested more frequently but who often cannot afford legal counsel who can facilitate a lesser sentence. In short, enforcement of such laws creates an underclass and permanently stigmatizes countless young individuals. So what is Der Trumpenführer proposing? A crack down and stepped enforcement of federal marijuana laws. Funny how the issue of transgender rights should be left to the states, but not marijuana laws. Oh, and meanwhile, Trump wants to revert back to the use of private, for profit prisons. One cannot help but wonder if he owns stock in such operations. Here are highlights from Time on this wrongheaded effort:

The Trump Administration will step up enforcement of federal
laws on recreational marijuana in states where its use is legalized, the White
House said Thursday.

Asked about the conflict between
federal laws barring recreational marijuana and the handful of states that
allow it, White House spokesman Sean Spicer said the Administration would
change direction from the more permissive approach under President Obama.

"I do believe you'll see
greater enforcement of it," Spicer told reporters Thursday during the
White House briefing.

It would represent the latest policy shift from the Obama
Administration, which declined to enforce federal laws in states that legalized
weed, such as Colorado and Washington, as long as the states regulated the
marketplace. As he prepared to leave office, former President Obamacame out in favorof
legalizing marijuana.

Spicer repeatedly linked the use of marijuana to thenationwide
opioid abuse epidemic, suggesting without offering proof that marijuana is a
gateway drug to more serious substances.

Earlier in the briefing, Spicer touted the president and the
GOP's commitment to deferring to the states over the federal government on
controversial issues.

Let's be clear, Spicer and his boss are a**holes. Oh, and did I mention that marijuana convictions often disenfranchise the disproportionately number of blacks who are prosecuted? It all fits nicely with Trump's white supremacist agenda. .

Thursday, February 23, 2017

Among the many things that Der Trumpenführer claims he will do is bring back jobs to America. Like most of what the man says, the claim is untrue, especially in terms of coal industry jobs and manufacturing jobs. And in one industry, the travel industry, Trump is undermining jobs and could be the cause of job losses. It seems that many foreign tourists have no desire to visit America given the hate, bigotry and discrimination that Der Trumpenführer have unleashed. Frommers reports that there has been a "devastating drop" in tourism to the USA. Indeed, the husband and I are headed to the UK in August to visit a much more LGBT welcoming country. Here are highlights from travel experts at Frommers:

Though they may differ as to the wisdom of the
move, the travel press and most travel experts are of one mind: They are
currently drawing attention to an unintended consequence of the Trump-led
efforts to stop many Muslims from coming to the U.S., pointing to a sharp drop
in foreign tourism to our nation that imperils jobs and touristic income. It’s known as the “Trump Slump.” And I know of
no reputable travel publication to deny it.Thus, the prestigious Travel Weekly magazine
(as close to an “official” travel publication as they come) has set the decline
in foreign tourism at 6.8%. And the fall-off is not limited to Muslim
travelers, but also extends to all incoming foreign tourists. Apparently, an
attack on one group of tourists is regarded as an assault on all.As far as travel by distinct religious groups,
flight passengers from the seven Muslim-majority nations named by Trump were
down by 80% in the last week of January and first week of February, according
to Forward Keys, a well-known firm of travel statisticians. On the web, flight
searches for trips heading to the U.S. out of all international locations was
recently down by 17%. A drop of that magnitude, if continued, would
reduce the value of foreign travel within the U.S. by billions of dollars. And
the number of jobs supported by foreign tourists and their expenditures in the
United States—and thus lost—would easily exceed hundreds of thousands of
workers in hotels, restaurants, transportation, stores, tour operations, travel
agencies, and the like.

According to the Global Business Travel
Association, in only a single week following announcement of the ban against
certain foreign tourists, the activity of business travel declined by nearly
$185 million. Other observers, including local tourist
offices, have reached similar conclusions. In referring to New York City’s $60
billion tourist industry alone, the head of the city’s tourist effort
complained that his agency’s effort to portray the United States as a welcoming
destination to foreign citizens “was all in jeopardy.” Several other tourist
officials have made like statements. . . . . there is plenty of evidence for a negative
conclusion.

As I have long said, hate and bigotry carry a heavy economic cost. Given Virginia's heavy reliance on tourism, this is not welcomed news. One can only hope that Trump hotels are especially hard hit - a number of bankruptcy would be a form of divine justice. Are you paying attention Rep. Scott Taylor?

Thankfully, polls continue to show that Der Trumpenführer's popularity is continuing to drop like a stone and that his efforts to wage war on the media appear to be failing. True, there is still a minority - probably Fox News viewers and Rush Limbaugh listeners - who cling to America's version of Emperor Palpatine, but the majority believe the media over a man who seems incapable of telling the truth. A column in the Washington Post looks at the welcomed poll findings. Here are excerpts:

It's
pretty clear what President Trump is doing by going after the media. He
sees someone who is tough on him, with a lower approval rating, and he sets up
a contrast. It's like making yourself look taller by standing next to a short
person.

Except maybe
it's not really working.

Anew poll from Quinnipiac Universitysuggests that while people may be
broadly unhappy with the mainstream media, they still think it's more credible
than Trump. The president regularly accuses the press of “fake news,” but
people see more “fake news” coming out of his own mouth.The poll asked
who registered voters “trust more to tell you the truth about important
issues.” A majority — 52 percent — picked the media. Just 37 percent picked
Trump. . . . . voters are even more critical ofTrump'streatment of themedia,
with 61 percent disapproving and 35 percent approving.

Even 23 percent of Republicans say Trump is mistreating the
media, and independents disapprove 59-35.

Trump
called the media “the enemy of the American people” in a tweet Feb. 17, drawing
widespread condemnation from journalists and defenders of the free press. Sen.
John McCain (R-Ariz.) even compared Trump's tactic to what dictators do to
undermine it.

In
addition, Trump may have gone a little too far by proclaiming the media the
“enemy of the American people.” A2013 Pew pollshowed broad, bipartisan support for
the media's role as a watchdog of politicians. Fully two-thirds of Republicans,
Democrats and independents said the press keeps political leaders from doing
things they shouldn't.

When Donald Trump meet with a who's who of right wing Christian extremists in June of 2016, he made many promises in order to win the backing of these individuals and their organizations. Among those promises were the rescission of transgender protections, passage of the First Amendment Defense Act that when passed will grant Christofascists the right to discriminate at will, and the rolling back of same sex marriage rights. Yesterday, Trump - or as I call him, Der Trumpenführer - delivered on the first of those promises by rescinding Obama administration protections to transgender students and by extension transgender adults as well. To my "friends" who voted for Trump, all I can say is "I told you so" and that they are complicit in this act and in what will follow. The blood of those who will choose suicide as discrimination increases is on their hands as much as Trumps and the less than "godly" Christians who sought these measures. The one irony in this foul move was that even Betsy DeVos, a woman with a long history of funding anti-LGBT hatred, opposed the move. Here are highlights from the New York Times on this triumph of hatred:

President Trump on Wednesday rescinded protections for transgender
students that had allowed them to use bathrooms corresponding with their gender
identity, overruling his own education secretary and placing his administration
firmly in the middle of the culture wars that many Republicans have tried to
leave behind.

In a joint letter, the top
civil rights officials from the Justice Department and the Education Department
rejected the Obama administration’s position that nondiscrimination laws
require schools to allow transgender students to use the bathrooms of their
choice.

The
question of how to address the “bathroom debate,” as it has become known,
opened a rift inside the Trump administration, pitting Education Secretary
Betsy DeVos against Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Mr. Sessions, who had been
expected to move quickly to roll back the civil rights expansions put in place
under his Democratic predecessors, wanted to act decisively because of two
pending court cases that could have upheld the protections and pushed the
government into further litigation.

But
Ms. DeVos initially resisted signing off and told Mr. Trump that she was
uncomfortable because of the potential harm that rescinding the protections
could cause transgender students, according to three Republicans with direct
knowledge of the internal discussions.

Mr. Sessions, who has opposed expanding gay, lesbian and transgender
rights, pushed Ms. DeVos to relent. After getting nowhere, he took his
objections to the White House because he could not go forward without her
consent. Mr. Trump sided with his attorney general, the Republicans said, and
told Ms. DeVos in a meeting in the Oval Office on Tuesday that he wanted her to
drop her opposition. And Ms. DeVos, faced with the alternative of resigning or
defying the president, agreed to go along.

Ms. DeVos’s unease was
evident in a strongly worded statement she released on Wednesday night, in
which she said she considered it a “moral obligation” for every school in
America to protect all students from discrimination, bullying and harassment.

Gay rights supporters made their displeasure clear. Outside the White
House, several hundred people protested the decision, chanting, “No hate, no
fear, trans students are welcome here.”

Individual schools will
remain free to let transgender students use the bathrooms with which they are
most comfortable. And the effect of the administration’s decision will not be
immediate because a federal court had already issued a nationwide injunction
barring enforcement of the Obama order.

[I]t
showed how Mr. Trump, who has taken a more permissive stance on gay rights and same-sex marriage than many of his fellow
Republicans, is bowing to pressure from the religious right . . .

[S]upporters
of transgender rights said the Trump administration was acting recklessly and
cruelly. “The consequences of this decision will no doubt be heartbreaking,”
said Chad Griffin, president of the Human Rights Campaign. “This isn’t a
states’ rights issue; it’s a civil rights issue.”

While
Wednesday’s order significantly rolls back transgender protections, it does
include language stating that schools must protect transgender students from
bullying, a provision Ms. DeVos asked for, one person with direct knowledge of
the process said. . . . was said to have voiced her concern about the high rates of suicide
among transgender students. In one 2016 study by the Cincinnati Children’s
Hospital Medical Center, for instance, 30 percent reported a history of at
least one suicide attempt.

Mr. Trump appears to have
been swayed by conservatives in his administration who reminded him that he had
promised during the campaign to leave the question of bathroom use to the
states. . . . . Trump’s decisions in office have been consistently conservative
on social issues. And he has shown considerable deference to
the religious right, naming many religious conservatives to top
cabinet posts and pledging to fight for religious freedom protections and
restrictions on abortion.

The dispute has underscored the influence that Mr. Sessions, an early
and ardent supporter of Mr. Trump, is likely to exercise over domestic policy.
As someone who has a long record of opposing efforts to broaden federal
protections on a range of matters under his purview — immigration, voting
rights and gay rights, for example — he has moved quickly to set the Justice
Department on a strikingly different course than his predecessors in the Obama
administration.

Perhaps went contraception becomes illegal - a goal for many Christofascists - intellectually lazy Trump supporters who failed to educate themselves on what they were voting for will wake up and realize that by falling for Trump's racism and xenophobia they voted against their own interests, both economic and personal.

Back when the Tea Party was organizing, Republicans thought it was great since the target of the venom was Democrats and progressive policies. Once the aim was shifted to incumbent Republicans, the GOP love affair for the Tea Party became something different. Indeed, much of the GOP is now controlled by the very same Christofascists and white supremacists who used the Tea Party moniker to hide their real agenda. Now that these same pitch fork carrying reactionaries control the Republican Party and have Der Trumpenführer as their anointed leader, suddenly organizing for political change is something abhorrent - at least if the organizers and protesters are liberals and progressives rather than right wing Christian extremists and would be KKK members and white nationalists. A piece in New York Magazine looks at the hypocrisy filled Republicans now decrying what they applauded when the insurgents were "conservatives." Here are excerpts:Last night, congressional Republicans came home to
rooms full of angry people. Attown halls across the country,
conservative lawmakers were protested, heckled, and shouted at. A few
unfortunate souls were even asked to explain — in detail —the GOP planfor replacing the Affordable Care Act.

“The so-called March on Washington was actually, in
numerous cases, planned out by civil-rights activists.”

And yet, this seems to be a genuine Republican talking
point. Two days before Trump’s tweet, Texas senator John Cornyn shared a New
YorkPostarticlethat also tries to discredit the
protests by claiming that they are strategically organized.

To
be fair, “the protests are planned” is a considerably more honest line of
attack than the “paid protesters” claim that preceded it.

So, liberal activists are conscious of optics and,
when possible, try to engineer an impression of widespread opposition via such
nefarious tactics as “not all sitting together.”

It’s legitimate for conservative commentators and
politicians to highlight these tactics. And, for many Republican House members,
it’s probably true that town hall protests give a false impression of the scale
of dissent in their red districts.

But there’s still a certain comedy to these complaints. The “training
manual” Sperry stumbled upon has been proudly shared by Democrats
and liberal activists over social media for months. The central charge of
Sperry’s op-ed is that Organizing for Action is, in truth, an Obama-aligned
front-group whose true purpose is … organizing for action.

Of course, the audiences at these town halls aren’t perfect
representations of district-wide public opinion. And of course, professional
political organizers are trying to channel liberal outrage in productive
directions. This is how politics is practiced on both sides of the aisle.
Earlier this month, the tea-party-aligned outside group FreedomWorks announced
that it will be organizing rallies and town hall counter-protests in support of
Obamacare repeal.

OFA’s “training manual” isn’t what’s unusual here. What’s
unusual is the number of people eager to study it. Activists do try to create an exaggerated impression of
public support for their goals. But the more people they organize, the less
hyperbolic that impression becomes.

The anti-Trump and anti-GOP protests need to continue to grow and make sure that Trump's approval numbers tank further and to insure the Congressional Republicans start worrying more about their own re-election prospects supporting the delusional, if not insane, standard bearer of their party.

As noted on prior occasions, I have no use for Milo Yiannopoulos and other gay "conservatives" who, in my view, are most motivated by either greed, racism or internalized homophobia. Indeed, some personal acquaintances who will remain unnamed could use some intense therapy sessions to deal with their unvoiced self-loathing and masochism. A column in Slate looks at the rise and even more rapid implosion of Yiannopoulos who has learned a harsh lesson in the willingness of the right to use supposed gay conservatives only so long as it fits the agenda. Then one is discarded like worthless trash. Yiannopoulos should be a lesson to other gays who allow themselves to be cynically used by their actual enemies. Here are column excerpts:

You
can thank Steve Bannon, now a central figure in Donald Trump’s administration,
for making the clownish hustler Milo Yiannopoulos a star. As the editor of Breitbart,
Bannon recruited Yiannopoulos to the site, where he published columns like “No, J.C. Penney, Fat People
Should Absolutely Hate Themselves” and “Birth Control Makes Women
Unattractive and Crazy.” If Trump is a poor person’s idea of a rich
person, Yiannopoulos is a Trump voter’s fantasy of a decadent gay sophisticate.
His shtick is to wrap various shades of reaction—anti-feminism, racism,
anti-Semitism, hatred of Muslims—in camp, to sell bigotry as cheeky
provocation. He and co-author Allum Bokhari put it this way, in a Breitbart
ode to the alt-right: “Just as the kids of the 60s shocked their parents with
promiscuity, long hair and rock’n’roll, so too do the alt-right’s young meme
brigades shock older generations with outrageous caricatures, from the Jewish
‘Shlomo Shekelburg’ to ‘Remove Kebab,’ an internet in-joke about the Bosnian
genocide.”

Yiannopoulos
uses his gayness to grant absolution to his mostly straight right-wing
audiences, telling them that by reveling in prejudice, they are bravely
flouting taboos. During the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, an at
event billed as an America First Unity Rally, Yiannopoulos told a crowd full of bikers and Alex Jones
acolytes: “I might be a dick-sucking faggot, but I fucking hate the left … the
left in this country is a cancer that you need to eradicate.” As a gay man, he
added, he aims to be “transgressive, to be naughty, to be mischievous. And
today in America that means being right-wing.”

It
turns out the right isn’t quite as enamored of transgression as Yiannopoulos
thought. In the past few days, his career has imploded, thanks to old but
previously little-noticed recordings in which
he celebrates sex between teenage boys and adult men. In quick succession,
Yiannopoulos’ invitation to speak at the Conservative Political Action
Conference was withdrawn, his $250,000 Simon and Schuster book contract was
canceled, and on Tuesday afternoon, he resigned from Breitbart. Even
Richard Spencer, the white nationalist who coined the term alt-right, now
dismisses him.

Yiannopoulos,
a sworn enemy of victim culture, reacted to his sudden fall by playing the
victim card. “I’m a gay man and a child-abuse victim,” he said, at a Tuesday
afternoon press conference in SoHo. . . . Over the
next 30 minutes, Yiannopoulos apologized, deflected, complained about a
political witch hunt, and tried to cast himself as a performer being held to an
unfairly literal journalistic standard.

Yiannopoulos’
act was all about baiting liberals over free speech; he’d say something
repulsive, the left would react, and conservatives could play the defenders of
edgy self-expression. In the end, however, the right shut him down the second
he made conservatives uncomfortable. Going forward, even if any right-wingers
are willing to be associated with him, it will be hard for him to continue the
fiction that conservatives are uniquely open-minded. That means he’s no use to
them, or to anyone, really. Poor snowflake.

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Out gay attorney in a committed relationship; formerly married and father of three wonderful children; sometime activist and political/news junkie; survived coming out in mid-life and hope to share my experiences and reflections with others.
In the career/professional realm, I am affiliated with Caplan & Associates PC where I practice in the areas of real estate, estate planning (Wills, Trusts, Advanced Medical Directives, Financial Powers of Attorney, Durable Medical Powers of Attorney); business law and commercial transactions; formation of corporations and limited liability companies and legal services to the gay, lesbian and transgender community, including birth certificate amendment.

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